Amtrak has been planning to replace the 1970s-era split-flap train departure board in the main hall of Philadelphia's 30th Street Station with a new screen. This would save money and upgrade the technology to modern standards.

However, Rep. Brendan Boyle insists that the public loves the split-flap board and is trying to force Amtrak to special-order a "modern" split-flap board.

So instead of leaving Amtrak alone and letting it get a modern display screen, Congress micromanages something that shouldn't be its decision, resulting in investing in outdated technology.

Crazy! It's all on Google.

This is another reason why Amtrak should do whatever it can to be free from having to get funding from Congress.

These flip-boards are becoming increasingly hard to find with their replacement by cheaper screens. Evidently, people like the old board and think it has historical value, thus they've petitioned their Congressmen to prevent it's replacement with a screen. Is it wasteful? Maybe. But it's hardly the worst example.

Perhaps I’m the contrarian here, but I suspect most people who don’t speak up in favor of replacing the split-flap board simply expect that it will go and don’t see a need to speak up to support that. I like technological improvements (don’t most of us) and in this case see that a digital display is cheaper than a new split-flap board, too. Further, hopefully most of us can agree that Congress should not micro-manage Amtrak. If Amtrak wants a specific thing, Congress should let Amtrak donwhat it wants to the same extent that any other business could do what it wants. If people don’t like it, then Amtrak, not Congress, should deal with it.

So, in short, my concern is larger: Amtrak shouldn’t be micromanaged by Congress.

Unhappy with the change yes, however "flip signs" are not easy to update in general, and require a lot of maintence oversight.If a screen goes down ,you just swap it out, with solari, it takes time to find and fix the problem.AS for the "congress critter", there are more pressing problems to deal with then this, just playing to the voters back home.It's just a comment by that critter, not policy

GCT was panels not single letters, an update required adding/changing panels for destinations cities/towns

There were times when the letters flap motor(s) would fail at NY Penn leaving gaps on destination names untila tech could get it fixed.

Amtrak want the info screens to be easy to maintain, update at a moments notice!I can live with the historic Solari boards in a museum setting.What works well in Europe doesn't always hold up well in the US.

David Benton wrote:Congress is not managing this, a Congressman is making a point about it.I presume it is in his area, so he is representing his constituency, rightly or wrongly.

Philadelphia is split between a touch more than 2 Congressional districts, whose boundaries have just changed because the previous map was ruled unconstitutional. Boyle's new district is now about a dozen blocks away from 30th Street Station at nearest approach, which is certainly close enough for his constituents to care very deeply.

I live in the district represented by Rep. Dwight Evans, who also represents the station itself. Preserving the old sign is not my top priority, but the generic screens Amtrak is installing at its stations are not legible at the distances required for the 30th Street Main Concourse. Lobbying Amtrak on behalf of his constituents is a perfectly reasonable thing for Rep. Boyle to do, and I would be fine voting for his re-election if I had been placed in his district.

As for having better things to do, Rep. Boyle took up this cause in early December, before the government shutdown and well before his entering the Majority in the House of Representatives. To my knowledge, he has not yet missed a vote w/r/t reopening the government. I do not believe there are facts in evidence to support the accusation that he cannot walk and chew gum at the same time.

Also worth noting that Rep. Boyle is responding to his constituents’ desires. This isn’t his issue.

Unless he’s a closet railfan, of course

Either way, this is the kind of stuff representatives do all the time - a group of constituents pressure a rep, who has an intern draft a letter to an agency, business, organization, or individual over minor issues that don’t really warrant their attention. Nothing to do with bloated government whether led by politicians right or left of center. As the saying goes, this is a nothingburger with cheese.